Photo-club de Paris

Last updated • 5 min readFrom Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Photo-club of Paris
Photo-club de Paris
Formation1888
TypePhotography club
Purpose Artistic photography
Headquarters Paris
Location
Official language
French
Founder
Robert Demachy
Maurice Bucquet

The Photo-club de Paris was a French photographic society for amateur photographers, established in 1888, committed to advancing the art of photography.

Contents

History

The Photo-club de Paris was established in 1888 by Robert Demachy and Maurice Bucquet, both former members of the Société française de photographie (SFP). [1] The club was an exclusive association for French amateur photographers, significantly contributing to the evolution of artistic photography. [2] Members of the Photo-club promoted the aesthetic principles of Pictorialism. [3] It became one of the leading societies that directed the worldwide artistic movement in the photographic field, including the Vienna Camera Club, the Linked Ring in London, the Belgian Association of Photography ("l'Association belge de Photographie"), and the Gesellschaft zur Förderung der Amateur-Photographie in Hamburg. [4] The active participation of amateur photographers led to further development of fine artistic ideas expressed through photography. [5]

Maurice Bucquet was appointed as the president of the Photo-club de Paris in 1890. [6] During that year, the establishment of the Photo-club de Reims was announced by M. Marteau, a corresponding member of the Photo-club. [7]

In 1891, the photographic society was led by Dr. Édouard Dujardin-Beaumetz as president. The Board of Directors was made up of Dr. H. Labonne, the president; Maurice Bucquet, the secretary; Paul Bourgeois, the archivist-librarian; Paul Gers, the treasurer; and included members Henri Guérin, Achille Darnis, Count Desmaziéres, A. Darius-Touslain, Paul Houdé, Dr. Jouslain, Emmanuel Mathieu, and Professor A. Rossignol. [8] [9]

The art-focused Photo-club de Paris distanced themselves from the technically oriented Société Française de Photographie in 1894. [10]

In 1897, the Board of Directors comprised M. Bucquet (president), Emmanuel Mathieu (vice president), Paul Bourgeois (secretary general), A. Darnis (archivist-librarian), Henri Guérin (treasurer), alongside members like Robert Demachy, Maurice Binder, Maurice Brémard, Paul Gers, C. Puyo, Paul Naudot, and André Toutain. [11]

Headquarters

The headquarters of the Photo-club de Paris was located in Paris, France at 40 Rue des Mathurins. [9] In 1895, the club had a room for small meetings. The studio, complete with well-lit dressing rooms, catered to photographic activities. Below the studio, there was a changing plate room free from water and chemicals, leading to four dark rooms. These could be reserved by Paris-based members for a fee, while provincial members could use them when not booked, with 150 members from Paris. The club notably used daylight for enlarging prints and organized spaces dedicated to various printing techniques. [12] In the following year, the Photo-club of Paris, steadily increasing in numbers, was preparing to change its quarters. It was set to build in the centre of Paris, a small five-story structure with lift, studio, laboratories, and salon. [13]

By 1903, the structure was described as expansive, featuring numerous rooms, one of which served as an audience room for hosting the annual Paris Photographic Salons. Member and visitor facilities included developing rooms, with a particular ground-floor room for visitors available at no cost. Visitors could purchase materials and utilize the services of the club's twelve employees, managed by Paul Bourgeois, the secretary general. The club provided personalized developing, printing, and finishing services, which served as an important revenue stream. [2]

Publication

Bulletin du Photo-club de Paris, July 1896. Bulletin du Photo-club de Paris -66 jul-1896.png
Bulletin du Photo-club de Paris, July 1896.

In 1891, the Paris Photo-club launched its own photographic journal titled the Bulletin du Photo-club de Paris, which served as the official publication of the society. [14] It was under the editorship of the secretary general, Paul Bourgeois. [2]

France's provincial clubs leveraged the journal to report on their activities, using it as a platform for information exchange and to cultivate a collective identity. The clubs were centers where members could share dark rooms, equipment, listen to lectures, view demonstrations, and exhibit their work. The journals reproduced these lectures, displayed photographic examples, and shared technical knowledge, thereby shaping the discourse and ethos surrounding amateur photography. [15] Frédéric Dillaye, a French writer, wrote a series of articles published in the bulletin describing the aesthetic effects of photography. [16]

A work titled Aesthetics of photography (French : Esthétique de la Photographie) was later published in 1900 by the Photo-Club of Paris under the direction of Paul Borgeois. [17]

Exposition d'art photographique

The Photo-club de Paris soon staged its first exhibition of artistic photography, originally scheduled to take place from December 10 to 30, 1893. [16] Constant Puyo, Robert Demachy, Maurice Bucquet, and René Le Bègue co-organized the club's first exhibition. [18] In the opening month of 1894, they managed to host one of the era's most celebrated international artistic photography exhibitions. The inaugural event, named the "Première Exposition d'art photographique," was held at the Galerie Georges Petit from January 10th to 30th, 1894, showcasing more than 500 selected photographs. [19] [20] The jury panel for admissions included six painters, one engraver, one fine arts inspector, and two amateur photographers. [21] In a large, well-lit, and orderly setting, with the best possible lighting, the works were arranged by the nationality of the artists. The photographs from Austria, notably by Hugo Henneberg, Heinrich Kühn, and Hans Watzek, were especially noted at the photographic salon. [22] While no formal awards were given, each exhibitor was presented with a silvered bronze medal, uniquely engraved with their name as a memento. [16]

Exposition d'art photographique, Galerie Durand-Ruel, 1897. Exposition d'art photographique Durand-Ruel.png
Exposition d'art photographique, Galerie Durand-Ruel, 1897.

In the following year, the Galerie Durand-Ruel on 11 Rue le Peletier hosted the second annual Exposition d'art photographique. By 1897, the Paris photographic exhibitions were held at the Galerie des Champs-Elysées. [23] The conventions successfully continued into the 20th century. The club also sent approved work of members to photographic exhibitions in other cities to serve as a club exhibit. [2]

Notable members

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pictorialism</span> Photography movement

Pictorialism is an international style and aesthetic movement that dominated photography during the later 19th and early 20th centuries. There is no standard definition of the term, but in general it refers to a style in which the photographer has somehow manipulated what would otherwise be a straightforward photograph as a means of creating an image rather than simply recording it. Typically, a pictorial photograph appears to lack a sharp focus, is printed in one or more colors other than black-and-white and may have visible brush strokes or other manipulation of the surface. For the pictorialist, a photograph, like a painting, drawing or engraving, was a way of projecting an emotional intent into the viewer's realm of imagination.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Willy Ronis</span> French photographer

Willy Ronis was a French photographer. His best-known work shows life in post-war Paris and Provence.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Robert Demachy</span> French photographer (1859–1936)

Robert Demachy (1859–1936) was a prominent French Pictorial photographer of the late 19th and early 20th century. He is best known for his intensely manipulated prints that display a distinct painterly quality.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Pierre Dubreuil</span> French photographer

Pierre Dubreuil was a French photographer, born in Lille, who spent his career in France and Belgium. As a pioneer of modernist photography, Dubreuil embraced innovative techniques and ideas that were celebrated, criticized, and at times, overlooked. Over the course of his career, which was interrupted by both World Wars, Dubreuil's work was shown at the Photo-club de Paris, the Albright Gallery exhibition in Buffalo, New York, the Little Gallery of the Amateur Photography Magazine in London, and the Royal Photographic Society. In 1988, more than forty years after Dubreuil's death, photographer and collector Tom Jacobson revived interest in his work, seeking out long-forgotten and displaced works that culminated in an exhibition at the Musée d'Art Moderne, Centre Georges Pompidou in Paris.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Société française de photographie</span>

The Société française de photographie (SFP) is an association, founded on 15 November 1854, devoted to the history of photography. It has a large collection of photographs and old cameras.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Michel Poivert</span>

Michel Poivert is a professor of the history of contemporary art and photography at the Sorbonne. He has taken a special interest in pictorialism, the subject of his doctorate thesis. From 1995 to 2010, he was president of Société française de photographie, the French Photography Society. In 2018, he founded the International College of Photography (CIP). In 2020, he was awarded Officier des Arts et des Lettres.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Constant Puyo</span> French photographer

Émile Joachim Constant Puyo was a French photographer, active in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. As the leading advocate of the Pictorialist movement in France, he championed the practice of photography as an artistic medium. For most of his career, Puyo was associated with the Photo Club of Paris, serving as its president from 1921 to 1926. His photographs appeared in numerous publications worldwide, and were exhibited at various expositions in the 1900s.

Lucien Lorelle was a French portraitist, publicist, humanist photographer, author, painter, a member of Le Groupe des XV and founder of the photography company Central Color.

François Tuefferd was a French photographer, active from the 1930s to the 1950s. He also ran a darkroom and gallery in Paris, Le Chasseur d'Images, where he printed and exhibited the works of his contemporaries. His best-known imagery features the French circus.

Kim Timby is a photography historian based in Paris who teaches at the École du Louvre and works as a curator for a private collection specialising in international nineteenth-century photography. From her research and teaching, Timby writes on the cultural history of photography as a technology.

Gilles Mora is a French photography historian and critic specialising in 20th century American photography, and photographer. He has edited books on Walker Evans, Edward Weston, W. Eugene Smith, Aaron Siskind and William Gedney, as well as published a book of his own photographs, Antebellum. Mora won the Prix Nadar in 2007 for the book La Photographie Américaine: 1958–1981: the Last Photographic Heroes.

<i>Les 30 × 40</i> Photography club

Les 30 × 40 or Le Club photographique de Paris was a photography club created in Paris in 1952 by Roger Doloy who was its president, with vice-president Jean-Claude Gautrand, photographer and author, and honorary president Jean-Pierre Sudre, professional photographer.

La Recherche photographique: histoire-esthétique was a specialised peer-reviewed bi-annual French journal, published from September 1986 to spring 1997, and edited by Paris Audiovisuel and the University of Paris 8.

Les cahiers de la photographie, published between 1981 and 1994, was a French magazine devoted to photography with the goal of promoting criticism of contemporary photography.

Gracieuse Céline Laguarde de Camoux, , was a French photographer and a member of the Pictorialist movement, creating photographs as an art work rather than as a simple image of record.

Michel Berthaud was a French photographer.

The International Congress of Photography or the International Photographic Congress, which was later renamed as The International Congress of Scientific and Applied Photography, was an international conference dedicated to the study and advancement of photography. Active from 1889, it focused on both scientific research and practical applications within the field.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alphonse Davanne</span> French chemist and photographer (1824–1912)

Alphonse Davanne was a French chemist, photographer, and writer.

René Le Bègue was a French photographer and one of the leading figures of Pictorialism in France.

Hugo Henneberg was an Austrian scientist, graphic artist, and art photographer.

References

  1. Robert Demachy | Science Museum Group Collection. (n.d.). Retrieved from https://collection.sciencemuseumgroup.org.uk/people/cp116898/robert-demachy
  2. 1 2 3 4 The Photo-beacon (p. 120). (1903). United States: Beacon publishing Company.
  3. PhotoMail. (2021, April 7). Speed | Robert Demachy, 1904 | Image of the Day. Retrieved from https://photomail.org/speed-robert-demachy-1904-image-of-the-day/
  4. Bulletin. (1898). Belgium: Association.
  5. Die Kunst für Alle (p. 551). (1898). Germany: F. Bruckmann.
  6. Gernsheim, H. (1991). Creative photography: aesthetic trends, 1839-1960 (p. 233). United Kingdom: Dover Publications.
  7. Journal des sociétés photographiques (p. 191). (1890). France: (n.p.).
  8. British Journal Photographic Annual (p. 460). (1891). United Kingdom: Henry Greenwood & Company Limited.
  9. 1 2 The Photographic News: A Weekly Record of the Progress of Photography (p. 246). (1890). United Kingdom: Cassell, Petter and Galpin.
  10. 1 2 Marien, M. W. (2006). Photography : a cultural history. London: Laurence King.
  11. 1 2 Annuaire général et international de la photographie (p. 184). (1897). France: Plon.
  12. Photography (p. 107). (1895). United Kingdom: (n.p.).
  13. Photograms of the Year: The Annual Review for ... of the World's Pictorial Photographic Work (p. 26, 27). (1896). United Kingdom: Iliffe & Sons Limited.
  14. Bibliographie de la France. (1891). (n.p.): Cercle de la librairie.
  15. 1 2 Impossible Presence: Surface and Screen in the Photogenic Era (p. 82-83). (2001). United Kingdom: University of Chicago Press.
  16. 1 2 3 La Science illustrée: journal illustré (p. 250). (1893). (n.p.): La Science illustrée.
  17. Bourgeois, P. (1900). Esthétique de la photographie. France: Photo-Club de Paris.
  18. Browne, T., Partnow, E. (1983). Macmillan biographical encyclopedia of photographic artists & innovators (p. 495). London: Macmillan.
  19. Naef, W. J. (1978). The Collection of Alfred Stieglitz: Fifty Pioneers of Modern Photography. United Kingdom: Metropolitan Museum of Art.
  20. Première Exposition D’Art Photographique- 1894 | PhotoSeed. (n.d.). Retrieved from https://photoseed.com/collection/group/1894-photo-club-de-paris/
  21. Liverpool and Manchester Photographic Journal (p. 374). (1895). United Kingdom: H. Greenwood.
  22. Photograms of the Year: The Annual Review for ... of the World's Pictorial Photographic Work. (1896). United Kingdom: Iliffe & Sons Limited.
  23. Science progrès, la nature: 1897 (p. 81). (1896). France: Dunod.

Commons-logo.svg Media related to Photo-club de Paris at Wikimedia Commons